Mark: 21-43
July 1, 2012
After Lent, Paschaltide and several solemn feasts the
Lectionary now returns to the continuous reading of Mark, with two of the most
vivid miracle stories of that Gospel.
Through the familiar technique of “sandwiching,” two
stories are interwoven in a way that enriches both.
The narrative begins with Jairus, a synagogue official
who throws himself at the feet of Jesus, begging him to heal his daughter, who
is near death.
Jesus goes off with Jairus, and the second story
begins.
In the crowd is a woman, whose suffering Mark vividly
describes. She has been afflicted for 12 years “with a hemorrhage,”
She has spent all she had on physicians without any
improvement (sounds hauntingly contemporary) and is growing worse.
Yet she is a woman of faith and courage and moves
through the crowd to touch Jesus.
When she
touches him, she is “immediately” healed, only to hear Jesus ask, “Who touched
me?”
Perhaps fearing a rebuke, she comes “in fear and
trembling,” only to hear Jesus’ words: “Daughter, your faith has saved you. Go
in peace.”
Salvation and peace are both the actual physical
healing and the gifts of the Messianic age.
The first story
then resumes with the report of the death of Jairus’ daughter and Jesus’
commands, “Do not be afraid; just have faith,” reminiscent of the faith
embodied in the woman just healed.
After a short and vivid description of the wailing
mourners, Jesus says, improbably, she has not died but is asleep, and the
mourning turns to ridicule.
With great tenderness Jesus then brings the child’s
parents, enters the room, takes the dead child by the hand and says simply,
“Little girl, I say to you arise.”
The young woman “arose immediately and walked around.”
There is then the interesting note that she was 12
years old, which provides the key to the linking of the two stories, since the
woman in the crowd had suffered for 12 years.
In the culture
of that time 12 was thought to be the marriageable age.
The “little girl,” then, has died before she could
become a wife and mother.
The woman had suffered an illness that prevented her
from bearing children.
Jesus not only rescues these women from death, but
restores to them their life-giving capacity.
Both can bring forth life from their bodies, one
racked with disease, the other deprived of life itself.
Bringing forth
children was seen in Judaism as an imitation of the life-giving power of God
and a fulfillment of the command to make the earth fruitful.
The Jesus who
emerges from these stories is one who is compassionate in the face of human
suffering and who makes the needs of these sufferers the norm for his action,
to the disregard of social taboos and conventions and church rules.
He talks to a woman in public and violates the
stringent taboo against touching a corpse.
Faith,
especially as embodied by the bleeding woman, can exist in the face of
seemingly hopeless situations.
These narratives also challenge the church universal
to recognize the courageous faith of women and to be on the side of women
throughout the world whose human dignity and ability to give and sustain life
are threatened by war, disease, abuse and poverty.
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